Complete Guide to Fee Tiers in Liquidity Pools: How They Work, Differences, and How to Choose the Best Tier as an LP
When you start learning about liquidity provision, a common question appears:
Why are there multiple pools with the same pair but different fees?
Examples:
- ETH / USDC (0.05%)
- ETH / USDC (0.3%)
- ETH / USDC (1%)
- ETH / USDC (2%)
What’s the point?
Which pool receives the swaps?
Which tier is better for LPs?
Why would anyone choose a higher-fee pool?
Let’s break it down.
1. What is a fee tier?
The fee tier is simply the percentage fee charged on each swap executed in a liquidity pool.
Example:
- Pool 0.3% → charges 0.3% per swap
- Pool 2% → charges 2% per swap
These fees are distributed among liquidity providers (LPs).
That’s your income as an LP.
2. Higher fee = higher profits?
Not always.
A pool can have a very high fee…
but if nobody uses it, no volume → no fees → no earnings.
LP profits depend on two factors:
- The fee percentage
- The volume processed through the pool
You need both.
3. Why multiple pools for the same pair?
Because protocols want the system to be flexible and efficient.
Each fee tier fits different use cases:
- 0.05% → stable or highly correlated pairs (USDC/DAI)
- 0.3% → moderate volatility (ETH/USDC)
- 1% – 2% → volatile tokens, new tokens, low-liquidity assets
Protocols like Uniswap introduced fee tiers for better market efficiency.
4. Who decides which pool a swap uses?
The protocol’s router, not the user.
It analyzes:
- Pool liquidity
- Current price
- Fee tier
- Slippage
- Swap impact
Then it picks the most efficient route automatically.
5. Can one swap be split across multiple pools?
Yes.
If it results in a better price, the router can split the trade.
Example:
Swap of 10 ETH:
- 70% through the 0.3% pool
- 30% through the 1% pool
All done behind the scenes.
6. How does this affect LPs?
As an LP, you want your pool to:
- Have enough liquidity
- Be in a competitive fee tier
- Be attractive to the router
More volume → more fees → more earnings.
7. Which fee tier is best for LPs?
It depends.
Low fee tiers (0.05% – 0.3%)
Pros:
- High volume
- Lower volatility
- More consistent earnings
Cons:
- High competition (more TVL)
- Lower earnings per swap
High fee tiers (1% – 2%)
Pros:
- Higher fee per swap
- Often lower TVL → more fees per LP
- Great for volatile or new tokens
Cons:
- Much lower volume
- Risk of capturing very few swaps
8. Practical example with numbers
Two ETH/USDC pools:
Pool 0.3%
- TVL: $5M
- 24h volume: $2M
- Fees generated: $6,000
Pool 2%
- TVL: $300k
- 24h volume: $200k
- Fees generated: $4,000
Conclusion:
Even with 10× less volume, the 2% pool generates almost the same fees…
but shared between far fewer LPs.
That’s the trade-off.
9. Can I provide liquidity to multiple tiers?
Yes.
Many LPs split their capital:
- Low-tier pool → stability
- High-tier pool → higher potential APR
Then they compare:
- TVL
- Volume
- Fees generated
- Actual APR
This is the best way to evaluate real performance.
10. How to know which tier is performing best?
Look at:
- TVL: total value locked
- 24h volume: real usage
- 24h fees: amount earned by LPs
- APR: estimated performance based on volume
A fee tier is good when:
Volume × Fee > Competition (TVL)
11. Final summary
- Fee tiers define how much each pool charges per swap
- The router decides which pool to use
- LPs should look for volume + efficient fees
- Higher fee doesn’t always mean higher earnings
- Comparing TVL, volume and APR gives you the real picture
Mastering fee tiers is a key skill for becoming a profitable LP in DeFi.
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